🎵 Rediscover the magic of Stevie Wonder with the original 1976 mint printing of “Songs In The Key Of Life”! 🎵

This collector’s set includes two albums, a bonus 45 record, and a never-opened 24-page lyric booklet. The album features a collection of tracks that have defined a generation:

  1. “Love’s in Need of Love Today”
  2. “Have a Talk with God”
  3. “Village Ghetto Land”
  4. “Contusion”
  5. “Sir Duke”
  6. “I Wish”
  7. “Knocks Me Off My Feet”
  8. “Pastime Paradise”
  9. “Summer Soft”
  10. “Ordinary Pain”
  11. “Isn’t She Lovely”
  12. “Joy Inside My Tears”
  13. “Black Man”
  14. “Ngiculela – Es Una Historia – I Am Singing”
  15. “If It’s Magic”
  16. “As”
  17. “Another Star”

From the soulful “Sir Duke” to the heartfelt “Isn’t She Lovely”, each track is a testament to Wonder’s unparalleled talent and unique style.

So why wait? Immerse yourself in the soulful world of Stevie Wonder. Order your copy of the original 1976 mint printing of “Songs In The Key Of Life” today and let the music speak to your soul! 🎶


Dead Wax
T1 T13-340C2-2645-S-10H-13  JS*XAL
T2 T13-340C2-2648-S-10H-13  JS*XAL
T1 T13-340C2-2646-S-10H-13  JS*XAL
T1 T13-340C2-2647-S-10H-13  JS*XAL
2649S-1C 1T
2650S-1A

Tamla Records was started on January 12, 1959 by Berry Gordy Jr. using $800 borrowed from his family’s loan fund. He originally wanted to name the label “Tammy”, after the Debbie Reynolds film, but that name was already taken. Later that year, he started his second label, Motown, which became Tamla’s parent label and the cornerstone of Gordy’s musical empire.
Motown and all associated labels, including Tamla, were sold to MCA Records and Boston Ventures in June 1988, which then sold it to PolyGram in 1993. During the PolyGram era and after 10 years in dormancy, Tamla was reactivated in late 1996 under the presidency of Andre Harrell with the intention of becoming a reggae imprint, but was then immediately retired after Harrell was relieved of his position in 1997. Tamla (hereby referred to at this point as Tamla Recordings) was the only classic Motown imprint ever to be reactivated since 1986, and its only artist was Cocoa Tea. As of the acquisition of PolyGram in 1999, Motown and all its properties are now part of the Universal Music Group.